23rd
As we at Cornerstone (and other growing churches) deal with a severe shortage of viable workspaces, I keep wanting to switch my entire children’s ministry team to one, large room. One of those with-no-cubes-just-tables-let’s-all-collaborate-feel. However, from what I know about how I work (and how I cannot) it feels a lot more logical to create private spaces. Which is a lot more expensive. Using money we don’t have, nor should spend on this.
Your thoughts?
Check out the post from 37 Signals that sparked this thought:
Interruption is productivity’s biggest enemy. It sounds counterintuitive to many, but we should be working harder on staying apart and less on getting in touch too much. A healthy dose of physical and virtual distance is a good thing. If we want to be highly productive we need more alone time.
Getting in too-much touch (interruption is not collaboration) - Signal vs. Noise (by 37signals)
